African Journal of Biotechnology

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Afr. J. Biotechnol.


Vol. 3 No. 2



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Rao NK


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African Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 3 (2), pp. 136-145, February 2004

ISSN 1684–5315 © 2004 Academic Journals

 

9TH BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY OF KENYA ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM

 

Review

 

Plant genetic resources: Advancing conservation and use through biotechnology

 

N. Kameswara Rao

 

Germplasm Conservation Scientist, International Plant Genetic Resources Institute, Regional Office for Sub-Saharan Africa, P.O. Box 30677, Nairobi, Kenya. E-mail: n.k.rao@cgiar.org.

 

 

 
    Abstract

 

 

 

Conservation and sustainable use of genetic resources is essential to meet the demand for future food security. Advances in biotechnology have generated new opportunities for genetic resources conservation and utilization.  Techniques like in vitro culture and cryopreservation have made it easy to collect and conserve genetic resources, especially of species that are difficult to conserve as seeds. While technologies like enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) have provided tools that are more sensitive and pathogen specific for seed health testing, tissue culture methods are now widely applied for elimination of systemic diseases such as viruses for safe exchange of germplasm. Molecular markers are increasingly used for screening of germplasm to study genetic diversity, identify redundancies in the collections, test accession stability and integrity, and resolve taxonomic relationships. The technology is also expanding the scope of genetic resources utilization.  

 

Key words: Biotechnology, conservation, plant genetic resources.

 

 

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